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Published in: Infectious Diseases and Therapy 3/2022

Open Access 01-06-2022 | Hepatitis B | Original Research

Patients with COVID-19 and HBV Coinfection are at Risk of Poor Prognosis

Authors: Shanshan Yang, Shengshu Wang, Mingmei Du, Miao Liu, Yunxi Liu, Yao He

Published in: Infectious Diseases and Therapy | Issue 3/2022

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Abstract

Introduction

This study aimed to determine whether there is a difference in the risk of death/critical illness between different stages of hepatitis B virus (HBV) (resolved hepatitis B, HBeAg (−) chronic hepatitis B [CHB]/infection, HBeAg (+) CHB/infection, and HBV reactivation) coinfected with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); and if there is a difference, whether it is due to abnormal liver function and to what extent.

Methods

This cohort study included all COVID-19 inpatients of a single-center tertiary care academic hospital in Wuhan, Hubei, China, between February 4, 2020, and follow-up to April 14, 2020. A total of 2899 patients with COVID-19 were included as participants in this study, and they were divided into five groups based on hepatitis B infection status. Follow-up was conducted for mortality and ICU admission during hospitalization.

Results

The median follow-up time was 39 days (IQR, 30–50), with 66 deaths and 126 ICU admissions. After adjustment, compared with patients without CHB, the hazard ratio (HR) for ICU admission was 1.86 (95% CI: 1.05–3.31) for patients with HBeAg (+) CHB/infection. The HR for death was 3.19 (95% CI: 1.62–6.25) for patients with HBeAg (+) CHB/infection. The results for the mediating effect indicated that the total effect of HBeAg (+) CHB/infection on death/ICU stay was partially mediated by abnormal liver function, which accounted for 79.60% and 73.53%, respectively.

Conclusion

Patients with COVID-19 coinfected with HBV at the HBeAg (+) CHB/infection stage have an increased risk of poor prognosis, and abnormal liver function partially mediates this increased risk of poor prognosis caused by the coinfection.
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Metadata
Title
Patients with COVID-19 and HBV Coinfection are at Risk of Poor Prognosis
Authors
Shanshan Yang
Shengshu Wang
Mingmei Du
Miao Liu
Yunxi Liu
Yao He
Publication date
01-06-2022
Publisher
Springer Healthcare
Published in
Infectious Diseases and Therapy / Issue 3/2022
Print ISSN: 2193-8229
Electronic ISSN: 2193-6382
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40121-022-00638-4

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